My mate just welded up the usual spots at the rear end of both sills on my Peugeot 405 and as I discovered a 5 litre tin of waxoyl and compressed air applicator i squirrelled away over ten years ago in the recesses of my shed. Is there access to the "back"/"inside" of the sill to blow waxoyl on the inside cavity of the weld if I prise off the plastic trim/carpet inboard of the door or is it better to drill 10mm holes in the sill apply waxoyl and then knock in peugeot fir tree fasteners?
What i always do on a welding job is cut away old rusty stuff. Use weld through primer (expensive but worth it) before welding that way protects everything inside. Then weld up. But otherwise as welshpug said just bang it through a hole if youre concerend
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On a break from 306oc for personal reasons. If anyone needs or wants me most of you have my number and or facebook messenger
Thanks for the good times guys n gals. I might be back. Who knows.
If you're worried the Waxoil's too thick spray something thinner down there. Old engine oil and diesel is the old trick. The diesel is that thin it'll soak righ into any rust, even in a seem. Parking it somewhere for a bit afterwards is the only problem. If it's wet you'll leave rainbows everywhere you go
I've just bought an SRDT as it happens. Had a couple of 405's over the years and they've always been good to me
strut tops, boot, door inners...all my other 405s had a 4 digit code...the only thing on this is the yellow stencil on passenger side suspension turret... I need paint as fuel flap plastic hinge broken and replacement is red!
M0SU metallic aquamarine, courtesy of RRG Peugeot Oldham...both friendly and not put out! Thank you for the help Paul...enjoy your SRDT...saloon I take it...Handsome car is the saloon!
Yep, saloon in steel/magnum grey. Same as the Sri afaik but with a diesel lump? Only 37K on the clock at mo so she's got a few miles left in her yet hopefully
What i always do on a welding job is cut away old rusty stuff. Use weld through primer (expensive but worth it) before welding that way protects everything inside. Then weld up.